A method of producing a halftone screen having a plurality of halftone dots arrayed along a desired screen frequency. The method comprises: a) using variable size halftone dots arrayed along the screen frequency to reproduce shades of gray equal to and above a predetermined shade of gray, the predetermined shade of gray having a first halftone dot size; and b) reproducing shades of gray below the predetermined shade of gray using the first halftone dot size arrayed along the screen frequency by deleting a number of halftone dots per unit area to obtain gray shades below the predetermined shade of gray.
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3. A method of manufacturing a halftone screen comprising:
a) selecting a minimum halftone dot size; b) identifying a desired shade of gray requiring a halftone dot size smaller than the minimum halftone dot size for said screen; c) calculating a number of halftone dots of said minimum size required to reproduce said desired shade of gray for said screen; and d) replacing the smaller size halftone dots required to reproduce the shade of gray with the calculated number of minimum size halftone dots.
4. A method for producing a halftone screened image comprising gray shades of lesser value than gray shades reproduced by a smallest dot size possible by a selected printing plate, the method comprising combining in said screened image (a) dot size modulation screening for shades of gray equal to and above a predetermined shade of gray and (b) dot frequency modulation screening for shades of gray less than said predetermined shade of gray, wherein said predetermined shade of gray comprises a first dot size and wherein said frequency modulation screening is implemented with halftone dots of said first dot size.
1. A method of producing a halftone screen having a plurality of halftone dots arrayed along a desired screen frequency, the method comprising:
a) using variable size halftone dots arrayed along said screen frequency to reproduce shades of gray equal to and above a predetermined shade of gray, said predetermined shade of gray having a first halftone dot size; and b) reproducing shades of gray below said predetermined shade of gray using said first halftone dot size arrayed along said screen frequency by deleting a number of halftone dots per unit area to obtain gray shades below said predetermined shade of gray.
2. A method for combining a halftone screen having a plurality of halftone dots of different size arrayed along a desired screen frequency with a halftone screen having a plurality of fixed size halftone dots arrayed at a random pattern without a visually objectionable transition area for reproducing shades of gray that are difficult to reproduce with either screen alone, the method comprising:
a) determining a minimum halftone dot size; and b) reproducing a shade of gray requiring halftone dots smaller than the minimum dot size, by using a reduced number of said minimum size dots arrayed along the screen frequency.
5. The method according to
6. The method according to
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This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/942,795, issued Oct. 2, 1997 on an application number 5,892,588, issued Apr. 6, 1999 on an application filed Oct. 2, 1997, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention is directed to the field of digital image processing to produce half-tone image data for driving a printing machine, such as an image setter which images films or plates to be printed on a flexo-press (a flexographic press), and is also directed to the use of halftone image screens to produce enhanced image data from the data provided from digital sources including desktop publishing outputs, scanner outputs and digital camera outputs.
Digital halftoning is a computer graphics technique for producing an image, with many gray levels, on a binary imaging device in which the gray levels are approximated by black and white dots. The image presentation (character, shape, and shading) is achieved by changing percentage of area coverage (dot intensity) from region to region (pixel region to pixel region). Dot intensity is altered by altering dot size (amplitude--cluster dot pattern screening) or by altering dot density (frequency--dispersed dot pattern screening).
In digital halftoning systems and methods, dispersed dot patterns are created by error diffusion techniques (stochastic generators) which provide a randomized grain effect pattern. The size of the halftone dot, whose shape can vary from screen format to screen format, is fixed for a given screen. Lighter and darker (gray) values are created by varying the population density of the dots. Cluster dot patterns are generated by selecting a distance between halftone dots for particular screen. Different gray values are achieved by varying the size of the dots. Conventional screen sets have been available with dot sizes that permit typically between 50 and 200 dots per inch.
Regardless of screen pattern selected, as pattern intensity is increased (percentage of area covered), image darkness and thereby resolution changes. With digital formats and digital implementation, an increase in gray value (number) results in an increased percent coverage.
In higher gray scale regions (darker) of an image generated, the cluster dot pattern screens have provided better visual acceptance of the imaging. In lower gray scale regions (lighter) of an image, the dispersed dot pattern screens have provided better visual acceptance of the imaging. It would therefore be logical to combine these two screens. However, when these two dot pattern screens have been combined to generate a single image, the transition between screen types has created an optically undesirable transition effect.
Moreover, in many reproduction processes, imaging dots below a specific size are not possible or problematic to generate and process. Therefore, reproducing gray levels in light tones is not possible or problematic, in such systems.
Flexographic press printing (relief printing with flexible rubber-like plates fastened to a cylinder) is a process in which the ability to achieve smaller imaged dot sizes has been limited. Typically, dot sizes have been limited to 40 microns or greater. Therefore, the definition quality of the printed image has been noticeably degraded in lighter areas.
What is desired is an improved digital imaging technique which provides enhanced digital imaging over the entire range of gray scale values, and specifically in low gray scale values.
What is also desired is an algorithm for implementing the digital technique which can enhance the image produced in lower gray levels (lighter areas of the image) when the smallest dot size available is not small enough to provide good images at those lower gray levels.
What is further desired is an apparatus to provide such enhanced digital imaging and for the implementation of the algorithm.
The invention provides a method of producing a halftone screen having a plurality of halftone dots arrayed along a desired screen frequency. The method comprises:
a) using variable size halftone dots arrayed along the screen frequency to reproduce shades of gray equal to and above a predetermined shade of gray, the predetermined shade of gray having a first halftone dot size; and
b) reproducing shades of gray below the predetermined shade of gray using the first halftone dot size arrayed along the screen frequency by deleting a number of halftone dots per unit area to obtain gray shades below the predetermined shade of gray.
The invention also provides a method for combining a halftone screen having a plurality of halftone dots of different size arrayed along a desired screen frequency with a halftone screen having a plurality of fixed size halftone dots arrayed at a random pattern without a visually objectionable transition area for reproducing shades of gray that are difficult to reproduce with either screen alone. The method comprises:
a) determining a minimum halftone dot size; and
b) reproducing a shade of gray requiring halftone dots smaller than the minimum dot size, by using a reduced number of the minimum size dots arrayed along the screen frequency.
Furthermore, the invention provides a method of manufacturing a halftone screen comprising:
a) selecting a minimum halftone dot size;
b) identifying a desired shade of gray requiring a halftone dot size smaller than the minimum halftone dot size for the screen;
c) calculating a number of halftone dots of the minimum size required to reproduce the desired shade of gray for the screen; and
d) replacing the smaller size halftone dots required to reproduce the shade of gray with the calculated number of minimum size halftone dots.
The features, advantages and operation of the present invention will become readily apparent and further understood from a reading of the following detailed description with the accompanying drawings, in which like numerals refer to like elements, and in which:
The present invention is a method of digital imaging by gray tone to halftone generation and thereafter by halftone processing which produces an enhanced digitally generated image output when the system hardware parameters have dot size limits above the definition desired in the image. The method and apparatus operate principally upon AM screening dots (size modulated dot pattern) and then frequency modulates the dot pattern to varying degrees of random deletion to generate resultant effects of size modulated dot pattern below the dot size limitations of the system hardware.
Digital continuous tone image data is generated from any of a plurality of devices,
The threshold value (e.g. 10) is chosen at a percentage of the possible dot size pattern dictated by system minimum dot size. Typically, if minimum dot size is 40 microns on the plate (4% at 150 lines per inch dot size modulation screen) then this threshold is set at gray value 47 input from the system parameters.
The output from the logical operation calculation circuit 39 is joined with the pass through 35 output from the AM screening gray value threshold detector circuit 33 to form composite image data 49, which is sent to the image setter 51 of a flexographic press printing system.
The circuitry,
The process steps carried out with the AM screening gray value threshold detector circuit 33, the logical operation calculation circuit 39 and the arrays 41, 43, 45 are shown in FIG. 3. The continuous tone (gray scale) image data 27 is designated as "N" in the logical operations and is obtained from the digital source. A minimum dot size 47 is designated in the logical steps as "MIN". It is the dot size necessary to do successful AM screening (dot size modulation). The value is empirically selected by the user base on equipment performance, after an engineering recommendation based on known equipment parameters.
The threshold detector operation determines if "N" is less than "MIN" step 30, FIG. 3. If no, 32, then the gray scale data is half-toned using a normal AM array which is generated 34 after obtaining the base array data 36. The output from the normal dot size modulation step 34 is sent 36 o the image setter with other composite data for the image.
If "N" is greater than "MIN" yes 38, then a random number from 0 to 1 is generated. This random number is kept in this range because the other calculation figures are in that range. Also, a "probability" value is generated. The "probability" is equal to the gray value divided by "MIN". These operations are designated as random number generation and probability step 40.
Following this step 40, a determination is made if the random number is less than the "probability" ("N" divided by "MIN"), step 42. If no 44, then a "MIN" dot array is generated 46 and the data is operated upon using this "MIN" dot array, and then passed 48 onto the image setter as part of the composite halftoned image data.
If the random number is less than the "probability" yes 50, then a null array is generated and the data is operated upon using the null array, step 52. The output from this step 52 is passed 54 on to the image setter as part of the composite halftoned image data. The output 54 is a nullity and determines the random deleted spaces.
The method steps carried out in steps 40, 42, 46 and 52 is shown in greater detail in
The present invention does not use a dot size modulation screening pattern,
In such flexographic systems, where dot size is limited to 40 microns (e.g. 4%), there is no ability for the equipment to normally reproduce a gray value of less than 4% (i.e., 1 to 4 on a scale of 1 to 100).
However, the present invention can operate in a system which has a dot size limit of for example 10%,
Moreover, because the dot frequency modulation effect of this invention is created from the dot area modulation screen, the transition from dot area modulation to dot frequency modulation occurs gradually over the range of gray values. For example a 9% dot density is created by deleting 10% of the 10% dots; an 8% dot is created by deleting 20% of the 10% dots.
The resultant screen pattern,
In a normal screening process, a gray value is converted to a dot through an AM array generation from the base array shown in FIG. 11. This array,
A 50% dot contains all the values below 50 set to 1,
The array shown in
Many changes can be made in the above-described invention without departing from the intent and scope thereof. It is thereby intended that the above description be read in the illustrative sense and not in the limiting sense.
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